Twice, about a year apart, almost 12,000 adolescents were surveyed
about their online and social media habits as well as their tobacco
use.
At the start, most of the teens were online and using social media
at least once a day. But 78 percent of them had never used tobacco,
and 88 percent had not engaged with online tobacco ads by doing
things like signing up for emails, watching videos, sharing links on
social media or getting coupons.
Overall, 6 percent of the participants had used one tobacco product
in the year leading up to the first survey and 16 percent had
sampled more than one, the study found.

Among nonsmokers, the few participants who engaged with tobacco ads
at the start of the study were 26 percent more likely to have
started smoking and vaping by the end, researchers report in
Pediatrics.
Among study participants who had already tried tobacco, those who
also engaged with online ads were 58 percent more likely to become
frequent users of cigarettes and other products by the end of the
study and 29 percent less likely to attempt quitting.
“One possible influence of engagement with online tobacco marketing
is to make teenagers curious about and wanting to try a tobacco
product,” said lead study author Samir Soneji, a researcher at
Dartmouth College in Lebanon, New Hampshire.
“Cigarette ads are not allowed on television, but there are far
fewer restrictions that would prevent tobacco marketers from
marketing to children and teenagers online,” Soneji said by email.
“Until those regulations are in place, parents should educate their
children about the dangers of tobacco, including e-cigarettes.”
Adolescents in the study range in age from 12 to 17, and
approximately one in three of them lived with a tobacco user.
The most common types of engagement were signing up for email alerts
about tobacco products, reading articles online or watching videos,
the study found. Some teens also used smartphones to scan quick
response (QR) codes to enter a tobacco company sweepstakes or
visited tobacco websites.
The study wasn’t a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how engagement with online tobacco ads might influence smoking or
vaping habits, the authors note.

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However, the results build on an extensive body of research showing
that tobacco ads cause young people to start using tobacco products
and become heavier users who are less motivated to quit, said Brian
King, deputy director for research translation at the Office on
Smoking and Health at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention in Atlanta.
“Tobacco products are advertised using themes that can especially
resonate with youth, including independence, rebellion, and sex,”
King, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by email. “The bottom
line is that tobacco product advertising causes young people to
start using tobacco products, irrespective of whether that
advertising is made by traditional methods or newer methods such as
the Internet.”
Online marketing may be harder for parents to police than
traditional formats like print or television, said John Pierce, a
cancer prevention researcher at the University of California, San
Diego, who wasn’t involved in the study.
“A major problem is that parents do not know when their child is
being targeted by the tobacco industry advertising algorithms,”
Pierce said by email. “Certainly we know that if the child clicks on
any element of the ad, then that child will be further targeted by
the tobacco industry.”

To figure out what their kids are finding online, parents should ask
them what type of ads are popping up in their social media accounts,
Pierce advised.
“If they are honest with us, then we can discuss with them what the
purpose of the advertising is and what the consequences of clicking
on any component of the ad will be,” Pierce said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2E3VHMK Pediatrics, online January 2, 2018.
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